U.S. Secretary of Defense Mark T. Esper delivers a speech during the Air Force Association Air, Space and Cyber Conference in National Harbor, Md., Sept. 18, 2019. (U.S. Air Force photo by Wayne Clark)

Secretary of Defense Mark Esper will give the recorded keynote address to the Naval Academy’s Class of 2020, academy officials announced Monday.

Friday’s graduation and commissioning video will begin at 2:30 p.m. with a tribute to the Class of 2020 before the streamed ceremony at 3 p.m. This is the first pre-recorded graduation for the academy, as coronavirus precautions shut down the Yard in March.

The video will include recorded segments from five private swearing-in events held at the academy over the last week. Groups of seniors returned to the academy last week for the first time since they left for spring break to move out of the dorms in Bancroft Hall and take part in private ceremonies.

Esper graduated from the Military Academy at West Point and later retired from the Army in 2007 after 10 years on active duty and 11 years in the National Guard and Army Reserve. He was sworn in as the 27th secretary of defense on July 23.

The late Midshipman David Forney will be honored in the ceremony. A seat in the first swearing-in event was occupied by a football helmet from the 2019 Army-Navy Game, placed in the Walkersville resident’s memory. He would have commissioned as an ensign and cryptologic warfare officer.

The 22-year-old football player was found unresponsive in his dorm room Feb. 20 and later pronounced dead. His cause of death is still pending with the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

To mark commissioning, a Naval Academy Class of 2020 flag will fly atop the Maryland State House. The flags have been waving around downtown Annapolis since April.

The academy has been criticized for separating midshipman for swearing-in and turning commissioning into a live stream event after two of the other military academies decided to keep their cadets together.

The Air Force Academy in Colorado held a scaled-down commissioning ceremony in April. Vice President Mike Pence spoke to the class, but with no crowd at its stadium and cadets staying 6-feet apart.

President Donald Trump announced last month that he plans to give the commencement speech during an in-person ceremony at the Military Academy at West Point on June 13.